An electrostatic bypass system and method as disclosed utilizes corona wires extending laterally across the flow path upstream of the section of the flow path of concern. The corona wires can be arranged to form a mesh across the flow path and can be powered by a power source to ionize the air surrounding the wires to thereby apply an electrostatic charge to the particulates as they pass through an ionized section of air proximate the wires.
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14. A particulate bypass system comprising:
a corona wire mesh extending across a particulate flow path, the particulate flow path having a particulate flow direction, wherein the corona wire mesh is configured to have an electrostatic charge applied thereto, where the electrostatic charge comprises a first electrical polarity and a corona voltage having an amplitude;
an open ended channel wall providing at least part of a channel, the open ended channel wall extending parallel to the particulate flow direction; and
an array of fins extending across the particulate flow path and providing at least one flow channel through a core of a fluid exchanger, wherein:
the amplitude of the corona voltage is sufficient to ionize a fluid proximate the corona wire mesh and to electrostatically charge a plurality of particles within the particulate flow path to form a plurality of electrostatically charged particles;
the amplitude of the corona voltage is based on an anticipated average mass of the plurality of particles;
one or more fins of the array of fins is configured to have an electrostatic charge applied thereto, where the electrostatic charge applied to the one or more fins comprises a second electrical polarity which is the same as the first electrical polarity and a fin voltage that is sufficient to repel the plurality of electrostatically charged particles; and
the fin voltage is based on the anticipated average particle mass of the plurality of particles.
1. A particulate bypass system comprising:
an electrically charged corona wire mesh electrically coupled to a power source and extending across a particulate flow path having a particulate flow direction, where the corona wire mesh is one of a positive corona wire mesh or a negative corona wire mesh, where the power source applies a voltage to the corona wire mesh sufficient to ionize a fluid proximate the corona wire mesh to apply an electrostatic charge to one or more particles flowing through the corona wire mesh with one of an electrostatic positive charge or an electrostatic negative charge; and
a fluid exchanger disposed in the particulate flow path downstream with respect to the corona wire mesh, said fluid exchanger having:
an array of fins extending across the particulate flow path having a fin charge that is one of a positive fin charge or a negative fin charge applied to one or more of the fins of the array, where a polarity of the fin charge and the polarity of the electrostatic charge are the same to repel the particles away from the array of fins as the particles flow through the fluid exchanger, the array of fins forming a core of the fluid exchanger and the fins are configured to form one or more flow channels through the fluid exchanger;
wherein a corona voltage having a corona wire voltage amplitude is applied to the corona wire mesh and the corona voltage amplitude is sufficient to cause an electric corona discharge thereby ionizing air in the particulate flow path sufficient to apply an electrostatic charge to the one or more particles sufficient to repel the one or more particles away from the one or more fins, where the corona voltage amplitude is based on an anticipated average particle mass; and
wherein a fin voltage is applied to the one or more fins of the array of fins having a fin voltage amplitude sufficient to repel the one or more particles away from the one or more fins, wherein the fin voltage amplitude is based on the anticipated average particle mass.
8. A method for a particulate bypass system comprising:
applying a corona voltage having a corona voltage amplitude to a corona wire mesh extending across a fluid path using a power source electrically coupled with the corona wire mesh, where the corona voltage amplitude is based on an average anticipated particle mass;
electrostatically charging with one of an electrostatic positive charge or an electrostatic negative charge one or more particles flowing along a fluid path in a particulate flow direction upstream with respect to a fluid exchanger using the corona wire mesh, where:
said electrostatic charge is one of an electrostatic positive charge or an electrostatic negative charge;
the corona wire mesh is one of a positive corona wire mesh or a negative corona wire mesh; and
the corona voltage applied to the corona wire mesh is sufficient to ionize a fluid proximate the wire mesh, thereby applying an electrostatic charge to the one or more particles flowing through the corona wire mesh;
providing a fluid exchanger having an array of fins forming a core of the fluid exchanger and the fins are configured to form walls one or more flow channels across the particulate flow path;
applying a wall charge to an open ended channel wall extending substantially parallel with respect to the particulate flow direction, where the wall charge applied to the channel wall is one of a positive wall charge or a negative wall charge, and where a polarity of the wall charge and a polarity of the electrostatic charge are the same, thereby repelling particles away from the channel wall as the particles flow in the channel wall;
applying a fin charge that is one of a positive fin charge or a negative fin charge to one or more fins of the array of fins, where a polarity of the fin charge and the polarity of the electrostatic charge are the same; and
repelling the particles having the one of the electrostatic positive charge and the electrostatic negative charge away from the walls of the one or more flow channels as the particles flow through the fluid exchanger, where:
the corona voltage is sufficient to cause an electric corona discharge thereby ionizing air within the particulate flow path sufficient to apply an electrostatic charge to the one or more particles.
2. The particulate bypass system as recited in
3. The particulate bypass system as recited in
4. The particulate bypass system as recited in
5. The particulate bypass system as recited in
6. The particulate bypass system as recited in
7. The particulate bypass system as recited in
9. The method of particle bypass as recited in
10. The method of particulate bypass as recited in
11. The method of particulate bypass as recited in
applying a fin voltage having a fin voltage amplitude to the one or more fins of the array of fins, where the fin voltage amplitude is sufficient to repel the one or more particles away from the one or more fins, where the fin voltage amplitude is based on the anticipated average particle mass.
12. The method of particulate bypass as recited in
adjusting the fin voltage to increase or decrease the number of elementary charges in the one or more fins.
13. The method of particulate bypass as recited in
adjusting the corona voltage to increase or decrease the ionization of air surrounding the corona wire mesh.
15. The particulate bypass system as recited in
16. The particulate bypass system as recited in
17. The particulate bypass system as recited in
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Field
This technology as disclosed herein relates generally to fluid flow systems and, more particularly, to air flow systems and the undesirable collection and accumulation of particulates in areas of the air flow system.
Background
Traditional fluid flow systems, in particular air flow systems, may have sections of the flow path where particulates collect and accumulate thereby restricting fluid flow. This can be due to the fact that sections along the flow path can have partial obstructions, or structures that extend laterally across the flow path with respect to the direction of the flow and that collect particulates. One specific example can be a Cabin Air Conditioning and Temperature Control System (CACTCS) having a flow path along which air flows, where a section of the flow path includes a Heat Exchanger (HX). The HX can have an array of fins, which can be the core of the heat exchanger, that extend laterally across the flow path with respect to the direction of air flow.
Particulates traveling along the flow path can collect/attach themselves on the array of fins of the HX and accumulate over time thereby restricting air flow. The reduction in air flow and the increase in pressure will necessitate a service action requiring cleaning or replacing of at least the fin section of the HX. There are known examples where aircraft CACTCS having an HX require cleaning or replacement of the HX at regular intervals that are much shorter than intended resulting in excessive maintenance cost for servicing the HX. However, the collection of particulates at certain sections along the flow path is not necessarily due to particulates attaching themselves to obstructions extending laterally across the flow path. For example, particulates can even attach themselves to the side walls around the flow path. Further, the section of the flow path where particulates collect need not be a heat exchanger. It could be any type of fluid exchanger. The fluid exchanger could be an array of baffles or vents.
In order to address the problem of particulates accumulating, a traditional electrostatic precipitator using corona wires and a positively or negatively charged surface or other filtration system could be installed upstream with respect to the section of the air flow path of concern (in the example—the FIX with fins) The corona wires of the precipitator cause a corona discharge, which is an electrical discharge brought on by the ionization of a fluid (typically air) surrounding a conductor (the corona wire) that is electrically charged. A corona wire can be a positive corona wire causing a positive ionization of the surrounding fluid, or a negative corona wire causing a negative ionization of the surrounding fluid. The polarity of the voltage applied electrically coupled from a power source will determine whether the corona wire is a negative corona or a positive corona.
Spontaneous corona discharges occur naturally in high-voltage systems unless care is taken to limit the electric field strength. The corona discharge will occur when the strength (potential gradient) of the electric field around a conductor is high enough to form a conductive region, but not high enough to cause electrical breakdown or arcing to nearby objects. Corona discharge is a process by which a current flows from an electrode (the corona wire) with a high potential into a neutral fluid, usually air, by ionizing that fluid so as to create a region of plasma around the electrode. The ions generated eventually pass charge to nearby areas of lower potential, in this case particulates traveling through, or recombine to form neutral gas molecules.
However, as the electrostatic filtration system collects particulates over time, it would also have to be cleaned or replaced. Therefore, a filtration system of this nature would not be a resolution. Further, filtration systems including cyclonic or porous membrane filtration systems will likely cause an undesirable pressure drop and may also require cleaning at shorter intervals.
A system and method is needed to reduce the service required to sections of a flow path having a tendency to collect particulates.
The technology as disclosed herein is an electrostatic bypass system and method as disclosed utilizes corona wires extending laterally across the flow path upstream of the section of the flow path of concern (in the example the HX is the section of concern—therefore upstream of the HX). The corona wires can be arranged to form a mesh across the flow path and can be powered by a power source to ionize the air surrounding the wires to thereby apply an electrostatic charge to the particulates as they pass through an ionized section of air proximate the wires.
The structures that extend laterally across the flow path downstream with respect to the corona wires and that have a tendency to collect particulates, can also have a charge applied with the same polarity as the charge applied to the particulates. The charge applied to the structure can be provided by a power source. With the same charge being applied to the particulates and the structure extending across the flow path, the particulates are more likely to pass through the section of the flow path that is of concern without collecting on the structure extending across the flow path. The charged particles will be repelled by the like charged structures in the section of the flow path of concern.
An implementation of a particulate bypass system can include an electrically charged corona wire mesh electrically coupled to a power source and extending across a particulate flow path having a particulate flow direction. The corona wire mesh can be one of a positive corona wire mesh or a negative corona wire mesh, where the power source applies a voltage to the corona wire mesh sufficient to ionize a fluid proximate the corona wire mesh to apply an electrostatic charge to one or more particles flowing through the corona wire mesh with one of an electrostatic positive charge or an electrostatic negative charge.
A fluid exchanger can be disposed in the particulate flow path downstream with respect to the corona wire mesh. The fluid exchanger can have a channel having an open ended channel wall extending substantially parallel with respect to the particulate flow direction. A wall charge can be applied to the channel wall that is one of a positive wall charge or a negative wall charge, and where a polarity of the wall charge and a polarity of the electrostatic charge are the same to repel particles away from the channel wall as the particles flow through the fluid exchanger.
Another implementation of the particulate bypass as disclosed can include a fluid exchanger that has an array of fins extending across the particulate flow path having a fin charge that is one of a positive fin charge or a negative fin charge applied to one or more of the fins of the array of fins. A polarity of the fin charge and the polarity of the electrostatic charge can be the same to repel the particles away from the array of fins as the particles flow through the fluid exchanger.
In a further implementation the fluid exchanger can be an air exchanger. For example, the air exchanger can be an air-to-air heat exchanger and the array of fins can form a core of the air-to-air heat exchanger and the array of fins can be configured to form one or more flow channels through the air-to-air heat exchanger. Yet another implementation can be configured such that the one or more fins of the array of fins form the walls of the one or more flow channels and where the one or more fins of the array of fins repel the particles away from the one or more fins inward into the one or more flow channels.
Another implementation of the technology can be a method including electrostatically charging with an electrostatic charge one or more particles flowing along a fluid path in a particulate flow direction upstream with respect to a fluid exchanger. The electrostatic charge can be one of an electrostatic positive charge or an electrostatic negative charge. The method can further include applying a wall charge to an open ended channel wall of the fluid exchanger that is extending substantially parallel with respect to the particulate flow direction.
The wall charge applied to the channel wall can be one of a positive wall charge or a negative wall charge. A polarity of the wall charge and a polarity of the electrostatic charge can be the same, thereby repelling particles away from the channel wall as the particles flow through the fluid exchanger.
Another implementation of the method can include extending a corona wire mesh across the particulate flow path and electrically charging the corona wire mesh with an electrically coupled power source, where the corona wire mesh is one of a positive corona wire mesh or a negative corona wire mesh. The method can further include applying a voltage to the corona wire mesh sufficient to ionize a fluid proximate the corona wire mesh, thereby applying an electrostatic charge to one or more particles flowing through the corona wire mesh with one of an electrostatic positive charge or an electrostatic negative charge.
Fluid flow (in the example—air flow) first passes through the corona wires, and the particulates suspended in the fluid flow will receive either a positive or a negative charge as the particulates are traveling through the corona wires. The efficiency of the bypass can be a function of the particulate's size, composition, mass and concentration within the flow. The efficiency can also be driven by the corona wires ability to effectively apply a charge to the particulates by ionizing the air.
The features, functions, and advantages that have been discussed can be achieved independently in various implementations or may be combined in yet other implementations further details of which can be seen with reference to the following description and drawings.
The electrostatic bypass technology as disclosed can reduce the amount of particulates that attach themselves to structures at a section of the flow path. The system can comprise a section of the flow path that collects particulates, a traditional heat exchanger (HX), an HX charging mechanism, and matrix of corona wires.
Airflow being sent through the heat exchanger can first pass through the matrix of corona wires and can gain a charge (either + or − charge). At the same time, the HX core is charged at the same polarity as the particulates. As these particulates pass through the heat exchanger they are repelled from the heat exchanger walls. These and other advantageous features of the present technology as disclosed will be in part apparent and in part pointed out herein below.
For a better understanding of the present technology as disclosed, reference may be made to the accompanying drawings in which:
While the technology as disclosed is susceptible to various modifications and alternative forms, specific implementations thereof are shown by way of example in the drawings and will herein be described in detail. It should be understood, however, that the drawings and detailed description presented herein are not intended to limit the disclosure to the particular implementations as disclosed, but on the contrary, the intention is to cover all modifications, equivalents, and alternatives falling within the scope of the present technology as disclosed and as defined by the appended claims.
According to the implementation(s) of the present technology as disclosed, various views are illustrated in
One implementation of the present technology as disclosed comprising electrically charged particles flowing through an electrically charged fluid exchange teaches a novel system and method for implementing an electrostatic bypass in a fluid flow system. The details of the technology as disclosed and various implementations can be better understood by referring to the figures of the drawing.
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
The arrangement creates a particulate bypass system including an electrically charged corona wire mesh 902 electrically coupled to a power source (for example a battery 904), and extending across a particulate flow path having a particulate flow direction 310. The corona wire mesh can be one of a positive corona wire mesh or a negative corona wire mesh.
A fluid exchanger can be disposed in the particulate flow path downstream with respect to the corona wire mesh 902. The fluid exchanger 104 can have a channel having an open ended channel wall extending substantially parallel with respect to the particulate flow direction 310. A wall charge can be applied to the channel wall that is one of a positive wall charge or a negative wall charge. A polarity of the wall charge and a polarity of the electrostatic charge can be the same, as illustrated, to repel particles away from the channel wall as the particles flow through the fluid exchanger 104.
The fluid exchanger has an array of fins, as illustrated in
A corona voltage can applied to the corona wire mesh 310 having a corona voltage amplitude sufficient to cause an electric corona discharge to thereby ionize the surrounding air in the particulate flow path sufficient to apply an electrostatic charge to the one or more particles, and sufficient to repel the one or more particles away from the one or more fins, where the corona voltage amplitude is based on an anticipated average particle mass. A fin voltage can be applied by a power source (for example—battery 908), to the one or more fins of the array of fins having a fin voltage amplitude sufficient to repel the one or more particles away from the one or more fins, where the fin voltage amplitude is based on the anticipated average particle mass. The fin voltage can be adjustable to increase or decrease the number of elementary charges in the one or more fins. The corona voltage can be adjustable to increase or decrease the ionization of the air surrounding the corona wire mesh.
Referring to
The various electrostatic bypass examples shown above illustrate a system and method for implementing an electrostatic bypass in a fluid flow system. A user of the present technology as disclosed may choose any of the above implementations, or an equivalent thereof, depending upon the desired application. In this regard, it is recognized that various forms of the subject electrostatic bypass system and method could be utilized without departing from the scope of the present invention.
As is evident from the foregoing description, certain aspects of the present technology as disclosed are not limited by the particular details of the examples illustrated herein, and it is therefore contemplated that other modifications and applications, or equivalents thereof, will occur to those skilled in the art. It is accordingly intended that the claims shall cover all such modifications and applications that do not depart from the scope of the present technology as disclosed and claimed.
Other aspects, objects and advantages of the present technology as disclosed can be obtained from a study of the drawings, the disclosure and the appended claims.
Richardson, Marcus K., Hart, Colin W.
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